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Galilee - History |
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The frontiers of this hilly area were set down by the Roman-Jewish historian Josephus (1st century AD). They were: Akko (Acre) and Mount Carmel on the west; Samaria and Bet She'an (Scythopolis) on the south; Transjordan on the east; and a line running through ancient Baca (probably modern Bezet) on the north, that line generally corresponding to the modern Israeli-Lebanese boundary. Some geographers extend Galilee's border northward to the Nahr al-Litani (Leontes River). Galilee is divided into two parts: Upper and Lower. Upper Galilee (chief city: Zefat) has higher peaks separated by narrow gorges and defiles. Lower Galilee (chief city: Nazareth) is a region of lower hills. When the Israelites took possession of Palestine, the Canaanites were strongly entrenched in Galilee. The Book of Judges (1:30-33) suggests that even after Joshua's conquest, Jews and Canaanites lived together there. During the reigns of David and Solomon (10th century BC), Galilee was part of their expanded kingdom; subsequently, it came under the northern kingdom of Israel.
Galilee became impoverished after the Arab conquest (636). In the Middle Ages Zefat was the principal centre of Kabbala, an esoteric Jewish mysticism. The region's revival in modern times is a result of Zionist colonisations. Beginning with the village of Rosh Pinna (Hebrew: "cornerstone") in 1882, a string of settlements was set up; these proved to be key bargaining points in the inclusion of all Galilee in the British mandate (1920). The United Nations partition plan (November 1947) envisioned the division of Galilee between Israel and the never-created Arab state in Palestine, but it all went to Israel after the 1948-49 Arab-Israeli war. A major change in Palestine's physical geography was effected in Galilee in the 1950s when swampy Lake Hula, north of the Sea of Galilee, was drained; the Hula Valley was converted into fertile farmland and the upper course of the Jordan River straightened. |
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